The UN's
second most senior official in Iraq, Jacqueline Badcock, told reporters
in Geneva via videoconference: "It is a fatwa (or religious edict) from
ISIS, we learnt about it this morning. We have no precise numbers."
The
Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant (ISIS), took over large swathes of the country last month and has
begun imposing its extreme Salafist interpretation of Islam.
But
several experts have speculated that the fatwa may have been a hoax,
and a number of journalists said on Twitter that their contacts in Iraq
had not heard of it being issued.
Charles
Lister, visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha Center and expert on
Iraqi and Syrian extremist groups, said the UN claim appeared to be
based on a "quite clearly faked statement" that began circulating online
on Wednesday.
"It would certainly be a very big coincidence if
the UN source was separate but happened to arise at the same time as
this fake statement online," he said.
"FGM just doesn't fit with
the Islamic State's image, notwithstanding how brutal an organisation
it has proven itself to be," he added.
A spokesman for the UN in Geneva told AFP that "checks" were underway in Iraq, and that until then "nothing had changed."
Badcock earlier said that if you took UN population figures as a guide, around "four million girls and women could be affected" by the alleged fatwa. Female genital mutilation is unusual in Iraq and is only practised in "certain isolated pockets of the country", she added.
She said only 20 families from the ancient Christian minority now remain in Mosul, the northern Iraq city which ISIS has taken as the capital of its Islamic state. Most have reportedly fled north into Kurdish-controlled territory.
Badcock
said some Christians have converted to Islam, while others have opted
to stay and pay the jiyza, the tax on non-Muslims the Islamic State has
imposed.
Culled from Yahoo News
No comments:
Post a Comment